Dear Randall, Jeff, and WeatherCat winter watchers,
Wow!! What a start to February we have had!! Here is the rain of this past week:

Counting the storm that brought us a little rain at the end of January we are now at 5.33" (135mm.) That's more than double the amount of all the rain we had accumulated since July-1, and we should get some more before this storm finally blows through tonight. It is a big help, but we are hardly out of the woods. We should have 19" (482mm) of rain by the end of this month. Still, so much rain is such a short period of time has its own hazards. So far no reports of any serious damage and we have lucked out: no flooding or broken branches. Still, the plants are getting a beating of another kind. Here is what our Acacia tree looked like a few weeks ago:

Here is what it looked like yesterday:

YEsterdays and todays snow was so wet I could hardly snow blow it. Clogged up the chute and at times the wheels did not move. Got it slowly. Snowing hard and the pass is closed.
When these storms turn to snow they must be particularly nasty because of the high moisture content of the snow. Portland Oregon apparently got into a near crisis situation when the rain turned to snow and they weren't equipped to deal with it.
I would think as dry it is and as low as the lakes and water supplies are you would think that you would take it how ever you can get it right now I have seen nothing but white here now for over 2 months and tired of it
Keep of the faith Randall! If the jet stream continues to shift further south toward its normal trajectory, that should help with warming up your corner of the country and bringing much more moisture. I assume that the snow you have been getting has been very dry, so for all the suffering, you won't get much runoff for all that white.
Cheers, Edouard
![Cheers [cheers1]](https://athena.trixology.com/Smileys/default/food-smiley-004.gif)